The Toromona are an indigenous people of Bolivia. They are uncontacted people living near the upper Madidi and Heath Rivers in northwestern Bolivia.[1] Bolivia's Administrative Resolution 48/2006, issued on 15 August 2006, created an "exclusive, reserved, and inviolable" portion of the Madidi National Park to protect the Toromona.[2]
^ ab"Toromona." Ethnologue. Retrieved 5 February 2012.
^Quote from Stolton, Sue; Nigel Dudley (31 May 2010). Arguments for protected areas: Multiple benefits for conservation and use. Earthscan. ISBN 978-1-84407-881-3.
The Toromona are an indigenous people of Bolivia. They are uncontacted people living near the upper Madidi and Heath Rivers in northwestern Bolivia. Bolivia's...
Toromono (Toromona) is a Western Tacanan language. 200 Toromono were reported in 1983, but they have not been located since.[citation needed] Toromono...
most isolated people in the world, and they are likely to remain so. The Toromona are an uncontacted people living near the upper Madidi River and the Heath...
the closely related Tsimané and Mosetén, and the voluntarily isolated Toromona. Ecolodges are found in and around the Madidi National Park, the oldest...
Brazil Shipibo, Loreto Region, Peru Ticuna (Tucuna), Brazil, Colombia, Peru Toromona, La Paz Department, Bolivia Yanesha' (Amuesha), Cusco Region, Peru Yawanawa...
Tirumbae, Yanaigua), Tarija Department Toba (Qom), Tarija Department Toromona (Toromono), La Paz Department Trinitario (Mojos, Moxos), Beni Tsimané (Chimané...
the Cavinas River, Madidi River, and Beni River, now probably extinct. Toromona - once spoken between the Madidi River, Beni River, and Madre de Dios River...
Tacana language Red Book Tapiete language Red Book Toba language Red Book Toromona language Red Book Trinitario language Red Book Uru language 2 Yaminahua...